| Ian Alan Paul on Thu, 24 Nov 2016 04:27:13 +0100 (CET) |
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| Re: <nettime> What is the meaning of Trump's Victory |
I think there were two pressing things to consider in the Post-Trump
United States.
First, we must struggle to see "The State" as something that is
fundamentally heterogeneous and multiple. To assume that it will act
with one purpose is to purposefully refuse to see that new forms of
contradiction and antagonism might not simply emerge between the state
and the people/multitude/etc, but within the state itself, particularly
under the administration of someone who unapologetically defies so much
of the grammar that has defined past presidencies. To do this isn't
necessarily to ally oneself with the state or even with part of it, but
to attempt to see what intrastate dynamics will emerge as important, or
not, in the coming years, and how that will come to shape the reality
of the struggle on the ground. If recent uprisings suggest anything
(Ukraine, Syria, Egypt, etc.), it's that we have to be able to see and
understand these competing forces clearly if we mean to act
meaningfully.
Second, I think we must struggle to remain attentive to the far-right
extra-parliamentary forces that may emerge under a Trump presidency.
We've already seen resurgence of a newly confident far-right in a
variety of contexts, and I think it would be wise for us to track and
study how they begin to organize and exert their power in novel
fashions whether in street actions or other venues. Additionally (and
drawing upon the first point), we need to track how the state responds
to the extra-parliamentary militant right, to see if they act
complicity with them by refusing to police them, or perhaps even come
to engage in actions with them as has begun to happen in places like
Greece where police attack refugee camps alongside neonazis.
Determining this will deeply inform how we imagine and interpret the
terrain of our organizing and action.
I hope that these ways of thinking are in some way helpful.
In solidarity,
~i
________________________________
Ian Alan Paul
Al-Quds Bard College for Arts and Sciences
Abu Dis, Palestine
www.ianalanpaul.com "History is made by men and women, just
as it can also be unmade and rewritten,
always with various silences and elisions,
always with shapes imposed and
disfigurements tolerated." -Edward Said
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